German Intelligence Agents Caught Staging False Flag Terror: NO JOKE!

DriftingByTheStormDriftingByTheStorm Posts: 8,684
edited November 2008 in A Moving Train
REPORTED BY AJ AND THE MAIN STREAM MEDIA, FOLKS!
here are your hundreds of news hits

and here is your infowars approved article.
Because frankly, and goddamnit, thats just how i roll.

German Intelligence Agents Caught Staging False Flag Terror
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Monday, November 24, 2008



German intelligence agents have been caught staging a false flag terror attack against an EU building in Kosovo, apparently in an attempt to create a pretext for EU police to be deployed in Kosovo after government leaders rejected the UN-mandated proposal.

“Germany declined to comment on on Saturday on reports that three Germans arrested on suspicion of throwing explosives at an EU office in Kosovo were intelligence officers,” reports Reuters.

“The explosive charge was thrown on Nov. 14 at the International Civilian Office (ICO), the office of EU Special Representative Pieter Feith, who oversees Kosovo’s governance.”

A police source in Kosovo told Reuters: “They are members of the BND”, but gave no further details.

German news outlet Der Spiegel named the men as BND intelligence officers.

Most reports claimed that the officers had thrown dynamite at the building, while others reported that a bomb was placed near the building.

The bombing attempt happened just days after Kosovan leaders rejected a plan by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s for the deployment of a 2000 strong EU police and justice mission, EULEX.

A Kosovan judge has ordered that the men be detained for a further 30 days as prosecution lawyers seek terrorism charges that carry a maximum 20-year sentence.

The three men were not in Kosovo under official auspices but were working on behalf of a contractor, named by German media as Logistic Assessments.

“The alleged presence of covert intelligence operatives has led to a deterioration in the cordial relations between Germany and the newly independent Kosovo. The German foreign ministry confirmed that three German citizens had been detained in Kosovo. The BND had no comment,” reports the European Voice.

The German secret service, the BND, is notorious for infiltrating extremist groups and using them for their own political ends.

In March 2003 amidst a highly publicized attempt to ban the activities of a German Neo-Nazi political party, the trial collapsed in court after it emerged that the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) was full of German intelligence officers occupying top ranking positions, including the publisher of the party’s newspaper, who were all secretly on the government’s payroll for decades.

“The case has been stalled for more than a year after it emerged that the government’s case rested, at least partly, on a network of informants in the National Democratic Party. This raised the question of whether any acted as provocateurs,” reported the Scotsman.

As many as 30 leading figures in the party were exposed as paid agents and informers for the BND.
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Comments

  • THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUTE
    THE GLOBAL EDITION OF THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Kosovo blast sends shock wave to Berlin

    By Nicholas Kulish and Dan Bilefsky Published: November 24, 2008

    BERLIN: A small explosion in Kosovo is quickly growing into a much bigger incident after the authorities in the capital, Pristina, arrested three Germans, alleged to be intelligence operatives, in connection with an attack on the building that houses the European Union's special representative there.

    A judge in Kosovo remanded the three men - who media outlets there and in Germany have reported are members of the German foreign intelligence agency, the BND - to 30 days of investigative custody Saturday. On Monday in Berlin, a government spokesman, Thomas Steg, called the charge that Germany was involved in terrorist attacks abroad "absurd," but declined to comment on whether the men were intelligence agents or, as has also been alleged, members of the German Army, the Bundeswehr.

    The case has provoked an equally large share of headlines and head-scratching here. Germany was one of the first countries to recognize Kosovo after it declared independence from Serbia in February and, according to the Ministry of Defense, has some 2,600 soldiers there as part of the NATO force in the country.

    "Germany supports EU policy in Kosovo and as such it would make no sense to attack the EU building in Pristina," said Max Stadler, deputy chairman of the parliamentary commission that supervises the German secret services. Stadler said members of the committee had not received any information from the government about the allegation of BND involvement.

    "There are public charges of a grave nature," he said. "Even if, as I hope and believe, there is nothing to this, the government should clarify it."

    German magazine Spiegel reported that the suspects had protested that they were investigating the crime scene when they came under suspicion by the Kosovar authorities. Photographs in the large-circulation Bild daily newspaper showed a photograph of the three accused men in court, their eyes blacked-over to protect their identities.

    "These guys are suspects and are being treated as such, nothing more, nothing less," said Veton Elshani, a spokesman for the Kosovo Police. "We believe that they were in Kosovo in a private capacity, with no diplomatic passports; they don't have immunity."

    The men are being investigated for committing an act of terrorism, which carries a penalty upon conviction of up to 20 years in prison. No one was hurt in the incident on Nov. 14. A small explosive device was thrown at the International Civilian Office, also known as the Blue Building, a Kosovo landmark that sits on a hill overlooking the city.

    The arrests came at a time when the EU has been struggling to deploy a 2,000-strong police and judicial mission to Kosovo amid concerns in Pristina that the mission would undermine its sovereignty.

    Last week, thousands of protesters took to the streets of Pristina to oppose a plan to create separate chains of command for Serbian and Albanian police forces operating in Kosovo, with the police in the ethnic Albanian areas reporting to the EU and the Serbian police in the Serb-dominated northern part of the country reporting to the United Nations.

    Four days before the attack, the ethnic Albanian leadership in Pristina rejected a plan setting out who has authority over the mission, which had been agreed to by the UN secretary general, Ban Ki Moon; Belgrade; and the EU. At issue is who will control Kosovo. Pristina argues that the arrangement would undermine its independence and entrench a de facto partition of the country by splitting it along ethnic lines. Pristina also worries that Belgrade would use the plan as a pretext to expand its authority over Kosovo.

    Since Kosovo declared independence, after nine years of being administered by the United Nations, Belgrade has sought to exert influence in northern Kosovo by holding illegal elections, and entrenching its sway over policies such as education and healthcare.

    Many in Pristina initially believed that the attack was carried out by ethnic Albanians angry that the EU was caving in to Serbian attempts to expand its authority over the territory
    If I was to smile and I held out my hand
    If I opened it now would you not understand?
  • Hmmm interesting. 10 bux it's not on the NBC Nightly News and it's cousins.
    Love is more important to me than faith.
  • Drowned OutDrowned Out Posts: 6,056
    surprised? They're GERMAN.
    This could never happen in the US.
    ;)
  • CommyCommy Posts: 4,984
    Sounds like the provocateurs the US has running around Iraq.

    The more unrest a country has the more need there is for a foreign military presence.
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